Abstract: | The influence of indomethacin on collagen synthesis in intact and healing plantaris longus tendons in the rabbit was investigated. Forty-four male New Zealand White rabbits were subjected to a standardized trauma (tenetomy + repair) on the left hindlimb. Half of the animals were subsequently treated with indomethacin, 10 mg/kg per day orally, and the other half with placebo. After 2 and 4 weeks the rabbits were injected intravenously with 3H-proline and killed 18 h later. Indomethacin affected the collagen metabolism differently depending on whether the tendons were involved in wound healing or not. In intact tendons the drug caused a small general inhibition of collagen synthesis. In the healing tendon there was a shift towards the synthesis of more insoluble collagen with little effect on the total synthesis. After 4 weeks there was also a slight but significant decrease in the amount of hydroxyproline in the most soluble collagen fraction from the tenotomized, indomethacin treated tendons. |